The oxidation state of iron in Earth's mantle is well known to depths of approximately 200 km, but has not been characterized in samples from the lowermost upper mantle (200-410 km depth) or the transition zone (410-660 km depth). Natural samples from the deep (>200 km) mantle are extremely rare, and are usually only found as inclusions in diamonds. Here we use synchrotron Mössbauer source spectroscopy complemented by single-crystal X-ray diffraction to measure the oxidation state of Fe in inclusions of ultra-high pressure majoritic garnet in diamond. The garnets show a pronounced increase in oxidation state with depth, with Fe3+/(Fe3++ Fe2+) increasing from 0.08 at approximately 240 km depth to 0.30 at approximately 500 km depth. The latter majorites, which come from pyroxenitic bulk compositions, are twice as rich in Fe3+ as the most oxidized garnets from the shallow mantle. Corresponding oxygen fugacities are above the upper stability limit of Fe metal. This implies that the increase in oxidation state is unconnected to disproportionation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ plus Fe0. Instead, the Fe3+ increase with depth is consistent with the hypothesis that carbonated fluids or melts are the oxidizing agents responsible for the high Fe3+ contents of the inclusions.

Kiseeva, E., Vasiukov, D., Wood, B., Mccammon, C., Stachel, T., Bykov, M., et al. (2018). Oxidized iron in garnets from the mantle transition zone. NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 11(2), 144-147 [10.1038/s41561-017-0055-7].

Oxidized iron in garnets from the mantle transition zone

Cerantola V;
2018

Abstract

The oxidation state of iron in Earth's mantle is well known to depths of approximately 200 km, but has not been characterized in samples from the lowermost upper mantle (200-410 km depth) or the transition zone (410-660 km depth). Natural samples from the deep (>200 km) mantle are extremely rare, and are usually only found as inclusions in diamonds. Here we use synchrotron Mössbauer source spectroscopy complemented by single-crystal X-ray diffraction to measure the oxidation state of Fe in inclusions of ultra-high pressure majoritic garnet in diamond. The garnets show a pronounced increase in oxidation state with depth, with Fe3+/(Fe3++ Fe2+) increasing from 0.08 at approximately 240 km depth to 0.30 at approximately 500 km depth. The latter majorites, which come from pyroxenitic bulk compositions, are twice as rich in Fe3+ as the most oxidized garnets from the shallow mantle. Corresponding oxygen fugacities are above the upper stability limit of Fe metal. This implies that the increase in oxidation state is unconnected to disproportionation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ plus Fe0. Instead, the Fe3+ increase with depth is consistent with the hypothesis that carbonated fluids or melts are the oxidizing agents responsible for the high Fe3+ contents of the inclusions.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
diamonds inclusions; garnets; majorite; synchrotron; Mössbauer spectroscopy; XRD; oxygen fugacity
English
2018
11
2
144
147
none
Kiseeva, E., Vasiukov, D., Wood, B., Mccammon, C., Stachel, T., Bykov, M., et al. (2018). Oxidized iron in garnets from the mantle transition zone. NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 11(2), 144-147 [10.1038/s41561-017-0055-7].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/397740
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